TERRE HAUTE — Few coaches stay in the same position at the same high school for 30 or 40 years.
But that doesn’t mean it’s easy to say goodbye when the time comes to make a switch.
Take Brian Heaton and Gabe Cook, for example.
Heaton, a former swimmer and 1991 graduate of Terre Haute North, has coached girls swimming since 1994 and boys swimming since 1995 in addition to serving as a substitute history teacher at his old school.
A fiery motivator during meets, Heaton has guided the Patriots to five sectional championships (four boys and one girls).
Now 33, he’s preparing to marry North teacher Quincy Delcolletti on June 9 at Vero Beach, Fla. To get a fresh start on their new life together, they’re packing up and moving to Anderson, S.C., in July.
Heaton hasn’t officially resigned at North yet, but he’s already informed the student-athletes and some administrators that he and his future wife will be leaving town.
“If we’re ever going to do it, it’s gotta be now,” he explained this week.
Heaton already has a teaching job lined up in Anderson and plans to go house-hunting during Memorial Day weekend, but he insists that he’ll take a break from coaching for at least one year.
“This was a tough decision because North swimming has been the centerpiece of my life for 16 years,” he admitted. “The hardest part was knowing how much I will miss the people — the athletes and the coaches.”
Heaton acknowledged that he’ll also miss the competition of meets, but he wont miss the grueling hours that often started with his arrival at the North pool at 5 a.m.
Still, he hates to leave behind so many athletes and former athletes who turned into friends away from the pool.
“I’m most proud of the amazing impact I’ve had on so many different lives and how much impact they’ve had on my life,” Heaton said.
North athletic director Ron Clinkenbeard said an announcement seeking candidates for the soon-to-be-open coaching position should be posted within the next two weeks.
“Brian’s going to be missed around here,” Clinkenbeard said. “We’re going to have some big shoes to fill. His dedication to the program will be hard to replace.”
Meanwhile, Cook is planning to leave his old school — West Vigo — so he can become the head wrestling coach at Terre Haute South.
A state-champion wrestler for the Vikings in 1996 and a four-year wrestler at Indiana University until he graduated in 2001, Cook had been a volunteer assistant for two seasons and a paid assistant for three seasons at West Vigo.
A special-education teacher at West Vigo Middle School, the 29-year-old Cook would replace Dave Stewart, who’s not a teacher, as South’s coach.
South athletic director Deb Webster said she’ll recommend to the school board May 21 that Cook be hired for the job. She stressed that this decision has everything to do with the Vigo County teachers’ contract stating that a qualified teacher can apply for a coaching job held by a non-teacher and nothing to do with Stewart’s performance as coach in 2007.
“Dave Stewart did a wonderful job,” Webster emphasized, “but Gabe Cook will do a wonderful job too.”
West Vigo coach Scott Rohrbach is sorry to see his longtime friend and assistant leave the program, but happy to see him receive an opportunity to start his own program.
“Gabe will do a good job,” predicted Rohrbach, who mentioned that Brian Otte will replace Cook as an assistant wrestling coach at West Vigo.
“Gabe’s great with kids. We’ve been friends for about 20 years and I wish him the best. But when he comes back home [for meets at West Vigo], we’ll be fierce competitors.”
If the school board approves the hiring, Cook will miss working with Rohrbach as well.
“Scotty got me started in wrestling when I was in eighth grade,” Cook recalled. “We’re pretty tight.”
But Cook is looking forward to the new opportunity.
“If I’m awarded the position, I’ll continue to work with the great feeder program that’s already been started here,” he said, adding that former North and South wrestler Barry Wickware is expected to join the South staff. “I know I’ve got a great group of athletes coming back.”
Cook realizes that locking horns with Metropolitan Interscholastic Conference opponents won’t be a cakewalk.
“It’s going to be a challenge,” he said, “but I’m looking forward to it.”
David Hughes can be reached by phone at 1-800-783-8742, Option 4, or at (812) 231-4224; by e-mail at david.hughes@tribstar.com; or by fax at (812) 231-4321.
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